Chrome is further increasing the privacy of Incognito Mode

Google Chrome icon on Android device
(Image credit: TechRadar)

An experimental setting has appeared in the experimental Android version of Chrome that will give users of Google's browser the ability to block access to Incognito tabs. Access will only be granted when the correct lock screen password is entered, or the relevant biometrics are provided.

This means that until your phone camera successfully scans your face to identify you, or your handset's fingerprint reader recognizes your print, access to Incognito tabs will be blocked. This does mean that there is something of a pay-off. Tabs – both standards and Incognito – tend to be left open to allow for faster access, and the addition of a level of authentication introduces a delay, albeit a very small one.

Chrome's Incognito Mode – like the private browsing modes offered by other browsers – is a great way to ensure that your online activity is not saved to your browsing history. But while it's a boost to privacy, it is not completely infallible.

If you have a tendency to keep incognito tabs open on your phone, there is nothing to stop someone who has access to your handset from seeing the sites you're trying to keep to yourself. Of course, you almost certainly have biometrics or a screen lock code in place, but this does nothing to stop someone from being nosy if you hand them your mobile to take a closer look at a photo. Now Google is clamping down.

Keeping it private

Although there is a new flag visible in Chrome Canary (called incognito-reauthentication-for-android, if you're interested), at the moment nothing seems to happen when it is activated. It could be that Google will enable the option in a future Canary build update, or it may be enabled via a server-side update.

It will be quite some time until this option is made available in the stable version of Chrome for Android, probably months rather than weeks. But first of all, it will undergo testing in the Canary and then Beta builds with users who are willing to try out pre-release apps. If you don’t yet have Chrome Canary for Android and like the idea of trying it our (bearing in mind potential stability issues), you can grab it from here.


Analysis: Android catches up with iOS

The fact that this feature is coming to the Android version of Chrome is not particularly surprising after it recently debuted on iOS. For now, it is looking as though the ability to lockdown Incognito tabs is only going to be an option that is made available to mobile users.

On one hand, this makes a lot of sense – Android phones and iPhones offers various security options and include cameras as standard that can be used as a locking mechanism via facial recognition, and many feature fingerprint readers.

Although laptops and desktop computers can also have these, it is not guaranteed. There is, of course, the option of locking tabs with a password, this is a far less convenient method, and one that Google is not particularly likely to implement for desktop users.

Via Ghacks

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Sofia Elizabella Wyciślik-Wilson
Freelance writer

Sofia is a tech journalist who's been writing about software, hardware and the web for nearly 25 years – but still looks as youthful as ever! After years writing for magazines, her life moved online and remains fueled by technology, music and nature.

Having written for websites and magazines since 2000, producing a wide range of reviews, guides, tutorials, brochures, newsletters and more, she continues to write for diverse audiences, from computing newbies to advanced users and business clients. Always willing to try something new, she loves sharing new discoveries with others.

Sofia lives and breathes Windows, Android, iOS, macOS and just about anything with a power button, but her particular areas of interest include security, tweaking and privacy. Her other loves include walking, music, her two Malamutes and, of course, her wife and daughter.

You can find her on Twitter and Mastodon.

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